Anti corruption audits in the Slovak Municipalities
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Transcript of Anti corruption audits in the Slovak Municipalities
Anti-corruption Audits in the Slovak municipalities
Background
• The decentralization of public authority, transfer of the competences, powers and public resources to local and regional government has brought many positives, but it also means an increase in perceived corruption at this level of governance.
• As it is clear from the current poll , almost one third of citizens perceive the corruption in local government as very extended in the long term.
Background
Local council, local government
(FOCUS, November 2009/March 2006/May 2004/March 2002/October 1999,
% of respondents)
27
25
20
19
20
20
25
28
25
23
24
8
5
16
20
22
24
28
25
28
28
10
8
9 14November 2009
March 2006
May 2004
March 2002
October 1999
bribery exists and is widespread it exists and is less widespreadit exists but cano not judge its occurence bribery does not existsdo not know whether bribery exists in this area
The most vulnerable areas according to the poll
Source: FOCUS for TI Slovakia, November 2007
AREA 1 2 3 9
recruitment policy 50,6 21 3,9 24,6
selling of municipal real estates 40,8 19,1 11 29,2
issuing of distinct permissions 40,6 28,7 2,4 28,2
public procurement 36,3 23,4 3,4 36,9
construction proceeding 35,2 29,1 5,2 30,5
renting of non-residential spaces 32,9 26 11,7 29,5
renting of flats 27,5 26,1 19,4 27,1
selling of flats into individual assets 26,1 26,1 20,1 27,8
selling of flats into individual assets 26,1 26,1 20,1 27,8
Development of audit strategy - history
• TI Slovakia involvement in local governments since 1999
• Best practices transfer
• 2008 – cooperation with the city of Martin – project „Transparent city“
• TI Slovakia - strategy and methodology for audits of city policies in relation to corruption potential
• TI Slovakia – development of anti-corruption tools for the city
Methodology
• public property sales and leasing policy
• recruitment policy/staffing
• policy of civic participation in municipal decision-making
• access to information policy: accessing vs. disclosing
• communication/media policy
• ethical infrastructure and conflict of interest of elected representatives
• ethical infrastructure and conflict of interest of the City Hall employees
• ethical infrastructure and conflict of interest of employees of municipal companies
• land use planning and construction policy
• grant-giving policy
• policy of transparency of legal entities constituted and established by municipality
• public procurement policy
• policy of public-private partnerships
• housing policy
• policy of allocation of places in municipal social care facilities
• policy of budgeting and informing public about it
• policy of public order
three phases17 municipal policies:
I. phase
• Aim:– identification of the areas that are
the most vulnerable to corruption
• Precondition:– establishment of the team
consisting of the TI Slovakia experts and the City Hall employees
• Output:– audit report
• Activity:– audit of the current state of the 17
policies stated before
– gathering data about particular policies from the City Hall employees through questionnaires
– meetings and consultations with the city deputies and relevant emploees
– own research on the city rules and procedures and webchecking
– analysis of the data and documents - assessment of the questionnaires
The basic concept through which TI Slovakia evaluate the policies is
Corruption = Monopoly + Discretionary power – Transparency**Klitgaard, R. Controlling Corruption. Berkeley and los Angeles, university of California Press, 1998.
II. phase
• Aim:– development of anti-corruption
policies for each of the 17 policies.
• Precondition:– local government can choose
priority areas (policies) for which it would consider adoption of anti-corruption measurements
• Output:– report: anti-corruption policy
recommendations
• Activity:– meetings with local government
– development of anti-corruption recommendations built for the particular conditions of given local government
– methodology is also based on Klitgaard's formula, so the recommendations are focused on the process of transparency increasing and decreasing of discretionary power in particular policies in local government.
– inspiration also comes from the best practises abroad
II. phase
• many recommendations concern active disclosure of information through the municipal web page and introduction of electronic register for various kinds of applications
• strengthening protection and rules for potential whistleblowers - as a protection for employees who report inappropriate behaviour in their office/department.
• method of the random selection when deciding on allocation of local government social flats
• recommendation to conduct auction when deciding about renting or selling flats
• using e-auctions in public procurement
• draft of the Code of Conduct
• introduction of Ethics Commissioner
Examples of best practises:
III. phase
• Aim:– assistance (training, discussions,
workshops ) with the process of adopting of anti-corruption recommendation
• Precondition:– the interest of the local government
to change situation and implement recommendations into legislative
• Output:– adoption of new regulations into
municipal legislative
• Activity:– discussions between TI and local
government about the anti-corruption recommendations
– drafts of new by-laws and regulations adapted to municipal conditions
– TI assistance with implementation of these regulations
– training/workshops of the elected representatives and relevant employees of the City Hall organized by TI
Experiences of TI Slovakia with audits
• TI Slovakia executed audits in the following municipalities:
Martin- was given the UN Public Service Award in the category
“Preventing and Combating Corruption in the Public Service” for its anti-corruption reforms
Žiar nad Hronom
Prievidza
Banská Bystrica
Bratislava-Ružinov
Summary
• The project has impact on everyone who is a part of the public life.
• After successful implementation of anti-corruption recommendation the public can monitor, judge and react on the local administration more efficient.
• The added value of this is that the local administration can win back the public trust in the processes of execution of local government administration. This, subsequently, is reflected on the public participation in public affairs.
• From the point of view of the employees and elected representatives of municipality, the project sets clear rules in decision-making processes.
• As the result, this limits the space for corruption behaviour.
Thank you for your attention